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Alleged Daesh chemical attack on Mosul a war crime, UN warns

Doctors in an urgent care hospital near Mosul said they began receiving patients showing symptoms of chemical weapons exposure Thursday.

Iraq's special forces troops inspect missiles found in a warehouse in the eastern side of Mosul, Iraq, Jan. 28. Daesh has used chemical weapons in Iraq and Syria at least 52 times according to a report published last year. (Khalid Mohammed / The Associated Press)

By The Associated Press

Sat., March 4, 2017

IRBIL, IRAQ—The United Nations warned that the alleged use of chemical weapons in Mosul, if confirmed, would be a war crime and a serious violation of international humanitarian law, according to a statement released Saturday.

“This is horrible,” Lise Grande, the humanitarian co-ordinator in Iraq said in the statement, “there is never justification — none whatsoever — for the use of chemical weapons.”

The alleged attack occurred this week in eastern Mosul, an area declared fully liberated by Iraqi forces in January. The attack hit a neighbourhood along the Tigris River — which roughly divides the city in two.

Doctors in an urgent care hospital in the nearby city of Irbil say they began receiving patients showing symptoms of chemical weapons exposure on Thursday.

“The mortar hit our house, right inside the living room where we were sitting,” said Nazim Hamid, whose children had burns to their faces, arms and legs. The family was being treated in the Irbil hospital.

“There was a very bad smell, it was some kind of gas,” he said. “My kids were affected, some of them were burned and some of them had difficulty breathing.”

Hussein Qader, the deputy director of the hospital, said all 10 patients admitted for exposure are in stable condition and will be discharged in the coming days.

Daesh, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has used chemical weapons in Iraq and Syria at least 52 times according to a report published late last year by IHS conflict monitor, a London-based research and intelligence gathering group. The report said that at least 19 of the 52 attacks took place in and around Mosul.

Most of western Mosul is still under Daesh control despite a handful of recent gains on the city’s southwestern edge by Iraqi forces over the past two weeks.

The U.S.-led coalition campaign of airstrikes has been pivotal to securing those territorial gains, but has also resulted in civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure.

Coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria between November and January killed 19 civilians and wounded two, according to a statement from the Pentagon Saturday. The report brings the total number of civilian casualties acknowledged by the coalition to at least 220, according to the Pentagon.

Independent monitoring organizations put the number of civilian casualties much higher. Airwars, an independent monitoring group based in London estimates the minimum number of civilian casualties caused by airstrikes to be at least 2,463.

The Pentagon report added that 19 reports of strikes resulting in civilian casualties were still being assessed, 11 of which occurred in and around Mosul.

Iraqi forces launched the operation to retake Mosul in October and began a push to retake the city’s western half last month.

After more than two years of slow territorial victories against Daesh by Iraqi ground forces backed by U.S.-led coalition air power, western Mosul is the last significant urban area Daesh controls in Iraq.

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